The Seattle Star Newspaper, January 23, 1922, Page 5

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THE SEATTLE STAR : Mast Prove She Is Alive| War Heroine i in a Dilemma MONDAY, JANUARY 23, 1922. CR oS TTC MUMIA UUL cl GRUNBAUM BROS. FURNITURE CO., INC. THE PEOPLE'S POPULAR HOMEFURNISHERS ~~ 100 Cotton-Felted Mattresses $ l 0.65 50-Lb. Weight, to Be Sold at cS > ORIN EO TI ittit All Sizes. One Hundred to Be Sold at This Price. A value that will appeal to each person at sight; 50-lb. Felted Cot- ton Mattress, covered with choice quality and color art tick- ing; has fancy stitched side and i edge of blue silKoline. For this | | Fated sistas $10.65 Carl Gould Heads Architect Chapter Waterhouse Heads Commerce Chamber} Officers elected by the Washington! Officers chosen to head the Cham: | State chapter of the American In-|ber of Commerce, according to the} stitute of Architects at the annual | canvassing board, include: President, dinner and meeting at the Washing | Frank Waterhouse, who recetved an ton-hotel Saturday night include:/almost unanimous vote, and vice Cari F. Gould, president; Louis Bae-| presidents, Alfred Lundin, formerly GIRL OF 6 SAVES THREE CHILDREN Tots Saved “From Blazing | | | | | Miss Alene E. Frawley der, first vice-president; A.J. Russell,|King county prosecuting attorney, i SAN ANTONIO, Jan. 232—America’s! Miss Frawley was born near tecond vice-president; Frederick |and Ralph S. Stacy, vice-president of Home by Elder Sister world war hero,| Rochester, N. Y. Her own father Westeott, third vice-president; Car! |the Union National bank. Frawley, who was a doctor and her mother was a Sebrand, treasurer, and H. ©. Sex-| Trustees elected were W. L.| CHICHAGOFF, Alaska, Jan. 23 and whot, buried a trained nurse. Before going to be secretary. | Rhodes, C. 8. Wills, J. T. Hardeman, | Three small children of Jobn Little |and bom and carries 17 wound |Hurope Miss Frawley had served as H. Alden was named chairman/|J. D, Lowman, C. H. Smith and Mor. | field, Indian tra owe thelr lives | stripes on her coat sleeve, Is now nurse in es, China, ater executive committee, While F. |!tz Thomsen. today to bravery of their 6year-|facing what she calla the toughest |) Hawall and | A. Naramore, J. H. Schack and Har. | — a+ old sin Mary Besides her 17 wound stripes this Density of Mars ts three-fourths lan Thomas were elected delegates to| Li 1 and his wife had gone of proving to the world that/greatest woman hero wears a dis the institute convention. that of the earth. to visit friends, leaving Mary at « tinguished g#ervice crons, the French piss Sv eaanetiaeeniannaaten » tr |neighbor’s. The other de gue nd many other | Younger than Mary lesser deco | Littlefield cabin, which w The home burst Into flames. artridges be further were ~= MISS BOOTH 10 | BE HERE FEB. 5) ported ing ¢ war STU MAGH Ra ROUBUE In five minutes ‘“Pape’s Diapepsin” ends after the tered the wat ‘State Constable Is the Uphed Atta Wiens snes cores Indigestion Gases Acidity Shot at by Skulker} nm beman to happen ran} — to Speak in Seattle | HOQUIAM, Jan. 23.—Tom Jack Fed tar @iave arene Flatulence Sourness Palpitation json, member of the state con Evangeline Booth, commander of all moveneee: stabulary, was shot at from am-| 41) 4 wo persons in the building {Salvation Army forces in the United Take “Pape’s Diapepsin” now! Injmen and women today know that)bush while hunting In the wool#| wore k See was at the toe. | tea, will appear before the Seattle five minutes your stomach feels f it is needless to have a bat « h.i near Lake Quinault. No trace In , nother ‘ene. r. another case a pb of shrapnel | pubtio Febre s . ands Don't bother what upset your stom. | A Ifttle Diapepsin occas his assailant has found. ee mae + earn po . Bae gs} publie- February 5. The commander. been mae recognized as the foremost woman tach or which portion of the food did | this: detica a man. the damage. If your stomach is they eat thet 13.|" Fourteen other wounds came, att] orator tn America, wilt deliver her sour, gasuy and upset, and what you fear. If your ® was on the front, and | fm re, “The World's Great: | just ate has fermented into stubborn care of your liberal limit without | ar “fatal” bt when the Romance.” The afternoon ap-| lumps; head dizzy and aches; you| rebellion; if your food is a damage lines dur al waa blown to plecea, | POArance will ba at a mans meeting | yw belch gases and acids and eructate instead of a help, remember the | faction” was the report m quickest, surest, most harmless ant-| EL 1 acid is Pape’s Diapepsin, which costs man I only sixty cents for a large’ case at Curl, drug stores.—Advertisement. undigested food—just take a little Pr Pape’s Diapepsin and in five min utes you wonder what became of the Indigestion and distress. Millions of and In the meantime Amertean soldiers dug her out of the ruins and took |her to a ho where re [mained for ya A year and nt er she left the hoe and was sent to the Walter General hospital at Washing: | In the even the commander will speak as tei hits auto, miles east | ot he pital Re ton Mins Frawley’s mother stepfather had believed her dead. veral installments of her war risk insurance had been paid to the family | Then came a telegram stating that officers: addressed by the on Army 1 friends, to be commander. “The World's Greatest Romance” has been delivered by Miss Booth times in Washington, D. C./ st oration she was re-| and her Miss Frawley's “body” was being |“ mn by senators ana sent to the h *. Great crowds Wondering why a “body” would apitat be sent to & hosy the parents nmander Booth went to Washir where they mmissioner and found Ming Frawle ve but feeble. Adam Gifford, of San Fran. after M Frawley was Col. George Dav t San Francis in and M. Bre reservat Mrs, Willian Gaurd, At that tir Netsco and was able to walk only iss Booth has been commander crutches American Salvation forces for "lay she weighs 162 and has dix |17 years, carded one of 8 - | And, in the m everything| ROBERT 8S. BEAN, federal judge ng A | « Help Your Kidneys Fight That Cold! |{«: rp whet are arch eee sr MF Oe) WARE, UP Winter Colds and Chills Weaken the Kidneys and Are the Direct Cause of Many Serious Kidney Disorders Mrs. S. P. Houston YOUR LIVER Rid Your System of Poisons Which Breed Disez e $ winter-time your backache-time? Does you suffering with torturing backache, rheu sf | every cold, chill or attack of grip leave you matic pains, headaches, diz and ail worn. Pare Bs lame, ac worn out? Does your out feeling pentout ones rey, ne until it seers you just em.day? back throb can't k ‘ Then look to your kidneys! Grips, colds and chills throw a Heavy strain on the kidneys They overload the blood with poisons and im purities that the kidneys have to filter off. The kidneys we unger this rugh of new work; become « 4 and inflamed. It’s little wonder- then, But don’t worry! kidneys need as Pills today Simply realize that your and of Doan’s Kidney kened kidneys t >» by drinl “Dosn’s Kidney should help ot thousands that every cold finds you. Ask your neighbor! Say These Seattle Folks: MIS. J. SCHMIDT, 6501 1 “I had such terribl “Use Doan’s,” = tlax with i bal ARE YOU A MOTHER? Health is Most Important to You g, Calif.—“I have taken Dr ite Prescription dur and found it exe 4 me of headache up and jealthy.” MEN_& WOMEN EASY“ PAYMENTS» Pills 8, Buffalo, Doan’s Kidney At all dealers, 60c a box. Foster-Milburn Co., Mfg. Chemis , [e) Ortitting D 1332 SECOND AVE. 209UNION * Hotel in Buffalo, advice, tablet end 1 Advertisement. free medi jtrial pkg or h | Salvation Army Commander| .ciraciors, were fined $80. by Pe tanker, and D. W. Burcha PAGE 5 mE RHODES to: Our Windows Will Tell Comfortable Abhart' for be School Wear 26 Boys’ Overcoats Special $5.95 Boys’ Dept.—Main Floor Rear made of chinchilla and heavy overcoatings in the latest belt all-round and two breast and side Boys’ Overcoats, styles, with inverted plaited back, full-lined and in sizes 3 to 9 years, While they last, each, $5.95. Coats are but not each size in every color or material, Boys’ School Sweaters Choice at $5.95 Boys’ Sweaters in slip-on styles and with large collars; all the boys are wearing this cool weather. They are made of worsted yarns, plated with cotton backs, and come in all school colo with regulation school stripings. They are substantial values at $5.95 just the Sweater Sizes are 30 to 38 Girls’ Union Suits Each, $1.00 Upper Main Floor Girls’ Fleece-lined Union Suits in high neck, long sleeve, ankle length style, and in white only. Sizes are 2 16 years. A suit, $1.00. Boys’ Union Suits Each, 75e Upper Main Floor Fleece-lined Union Suits in sizes 6 to 16 years. These are high neck, long sleeve, ankle length styles, in gray only. A suit, 75¢. Men’s Cashmere Sox 85c, or 3 for $1.00 Main 200 pairs of Men’s Seamless Cash- mere Hose, with heavy ribbed tops; a very practical Hose for this weather. Sizes are 10 to 1114, in colors of black and oxford. A pair 35¢, or 3 pairs for $1.00. Plain White Voiles A yard, 30c Domestic Section—Upper Main Floor 88-inch Voiles, suitable for dresses and curtain materials. A yard, 30¢. Floor Infants’ First-Step Shoes —A Pair, $1.75 Infants’ Dept—Upper Main Floor ants’ Kid Shoes in black, black and white, champagne and brown, and in 3, 31% and 4. They have a semi-stiffened leather sole that is most suitable for babies just learning to walk. A pair, $1.75, FAYTOOLOW, Truck Knocks Down |New Chief Presides Banker and F. riend| at Legion Meeting J. Jahn and Victor Bresst,| Injuries received by M. F. Rainier_Noble post, No. 1, Amer — can Legion, will hold its first bush — ness meeting under the direction of Its new officers Monday evening, at 8 o'clock, in the Armory, when J. Ar thur Younger takes the chair, Further plans are etill being made kus, . ship. lice Judge John B, Gordon Satur | ping man, when a truck bumped into day. They were found guilty Of) them on the highway near the High paying their laborers lems than the/jands Sunday, were reported not se minimum wae. The two men and Seattle contractors are preparing | their wives were returning from the to test the constitutionality of the! Highlands when a tire biew out. The| nance, which requires con-| men were standing in the road when | t to pay laborers employed! the truck struck thelr car, slewed | "°F he veterans’ employment barssaady on city improvement work the pre-| over and knocked them down. The | “#4rold Wolfe having recently beam vatling wage paid by the city for truck driver and a male companion | appointed chairman of the employe uch work | fied into the woods and disappeared. ment committee. Jahn Brees! were charred ——— t 4 their men $4 al ling city wage th ay wh |for suc wih, shir S S Se S «| Fails i in n Fight to Keep Lang on Job Douglas A. Shelor, manager of a & tomobile of Western! Or ~ on, is bac Seattle after | ‘ a trip to Olympia and an unsuc cousful attempt to persuade Gover- nor Hart to retain Maj, Louis M Lang as head of the state highway patrol. “Pape’s Cold Compound” is Quickest Relief Known Don’t #tay stuffed-up! Quit blow-| stops nose running; relieves head. ing and anuffling! A dose of “Pape’a! aches dullness, feverishness, snes ng. ‘ola Compound” taken every two nasa rig *y *°| «“pape's Cold Compound™ te the hours until three doses are taken! quickest, qurest relief knowD and usually breaks up @ cold and ends | costs only a few cents at drug stores, all grippe misery, It acts without assistance, Tastes The first dose opens clogged-up | nice. Re ep no quinine. Insist nostrils and air passages of head; —Advertisement, a Sunday Miss Young is survived by two sis ters, Miss Mabe) 8. Young and Mrs. Willlam R. Towne, both of Seattle Number 8 Griswold Waffle Iron Special at 2 $1.79 Regular price $2.19 FREE—A te 2 Carton of Clow’s Waffle Flour If your wife has a ‘€ Griswold iron are rich, y to make. These W me for catching grease. wold” she will bake waffles right. Waffles from a crisp and brown—with maple syrup are delicious—and so ffle Irons have the cold wire handles and the grooved SPECIAL at $1.79. 8-foot Tree Pruners Special $1.49 2-quart Betty Bright Aluminum Double Boiler Special at $1.49 Don't fail to take advantage of this Buy. your Pruner great BAR( AIN Tuesday at a These 2-quart “Bet- . 4 ty Bright” Double ing—We are pr rose with a handle and a good steel cut- the 8-foot size, Boilers are made of select . wood pure aluminum highly polished. A BIG SPECIAL AT $1.49 ting blade, $1.49. special at

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